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  1. La batalla de Austerlitz, también conocida como la batalla de los Tres Emperadores, enfrentó el 2 de diciembre de 1805 a un ejército francés encabezado por el emperador Napoleón I contra las fuerzas combinadas ruso-austríacas del zar ruso Alejandro I y el emperador austríaco Francisco I en el contexto de las Guerras Napoleónicas.

  2. Here, within these pages, are exhaustive orders of battle from August to December 1805, the composition of corps and divisions and how units evolved from their Revolutionary formations, essential details of the working structure of Napoleon’s army, how and where they marched towards their famous victory, maps galore, and of course their flags ...

  3. The Battle of Austerlitz, December 2, 1805: The day of the Battle [Noon, December 2, 1805]: Minor victory for the Grande Armee. The Grande Armee has suffered losses of: [ 20%] 15344 men of all arms incl.[ 3%] 2594 prisoners of all arms.

  4. 19 de dic. de 2019 · 146 p. 23 cm. The first French edition was published anonymously in 1805 under title: La bataille d'Austerlitz. The notes "by a French officer" are ascribed to Napoleon.

  5. 1 de nov. de 2021 · It is not the strength of the respective armies opposed to each other at the battle of Austerlitz, or the losses they sustained, which particularly distinguishes it, from many of those which took place in the first campaigns of the French Revolution, and the seven years war.

  6. On December 2, 1805, Napoleon's 72,000-strong French army defeated a larger Allied army of 90,000 Russians and Austrians commanded by Tsar Alexander I and Emperor Francis II near the town of Austerlitz in Moravia. The battle resulted in 15,000 Allied casualties and the capture of 12,000 prisoners and 180 guns, while the French suffered only ...

  7. Pdf. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/24009173/>. The first French edition was published anonymously in 1805 under title: La bataille d'Austerlitz. The notes "by a French officer" are ascribed to Napoleon. Also available in digital form.